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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Business Research Unit
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TZID:Europe/Lisbon
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DTSTART:20260329T010000
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260416T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260416T160000
DTSTAMP:20260416T005314
CREATED:20260401T102734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260412T163740Z
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SUMMARY:Meet the Editors: Donald M. Truxillo
DESCRIPTION:Building 4\, Room A306\nor join online:\nMeeting ID: 331 480 777 427 33\nAccess code: aG9HU9PZ \nDonald M. Truxillo is Associate Editor at Work\, Aging and Retirement (Scimago Q1) and Associate Editor of the Journal of Applied Psychology (ABS4*/FT50). \nTruxillo is Professor at Kemmy Business School\, University of Limerick\, Ireland. He served as associate editor for the Journal of Management and is currently an associate editor at Work\, Aging and Retirement and at the Journal of Applied Psychology. He is a member of ten editorial boards\, such as Journal of Applied Psychology\, Personnel Psychology\, and Human Resource Management Review. He is the author of over 100 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters.  He has coauthored two textbooks\, Psychology and Work: Introduction to Industrial and Organizational Psychology (2016; Routledge) and Human Resource Management: People\, Data\, and Analytics (2019; Sage). His research has been supported by the SHRM Foundation\, the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)\, and the National Science Foundation (NSF)\, most recently to study privacy and security issues associated with online hiring.
URL:https://bru.iscte-iul.pt/event/meet-the-editors-donald-m-truxillo/
LOCATION:Building 4\, 3rd Floor\, Room A306
CATEGORIES:Meet the Editors
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Lisbon:20260421T140000
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SUMMARY:BRU Research Seminar: Marta Morgado Rosa
DESCRIPTION:Guest Speaker: Marta Morgado Rosa (BRU-Iscte) \nTime: 14:00 \nTitle: Lying for yourself or for others: does confession impact moral costs? \nAbstract:Standard neoclassical models predict lying whenever benefits exceed costs\, yet experimental evidence shows many individuals avoid dishonesty and may lie for altruistic or efficiency reasons (Gneezy\, 2005; Erat and Gneezy\, 2012; Fischbacher and Föllmi-Heusi\, 2013; Abeler et al.\, 2019). This paper tests whether confession affects the moral cost of lying\, either by reinforcing norms or providing moral relief. We conducted a field experiment during World Youth Day Lisbon 2023 using the die-under-the-cup paradigm (Fischbacher and Föllmi-Heusi\, 2013). Participants reported private die rolls\, with higher numbers yielding higher payoffs. Two treatments varied whether payoffs benefited participants or an NGO\, capturing selfish versus altruistic lying\, and we recorded same-day confession. Among 1\,641 participants\, reported outcomes exceed the truthful benchmark\, indicating widespread dishonesty. However\, lying does not differ significantly by confession status or treatment\, with only minor variation across charities and no robust demographic effects. \nSession Chair: Catarina Roseta Palma \nJoin online:
URL:https://bru.iscte-iul.pt/event/bru-research-seminar-marta-morgado-rosa/
LOCATION:ONLINE
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